Author Topic: Black President, Double Standard: Why White Liberals Are Abandoning Obama  (Read 276 times)

Offline Reginald Hudlin

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THE NATION:

Published on The Nation (http://www.thenation.com)


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Black President, Double Standard: Why White Liberals Are Abandoning Obama
Melissa Harris-Perry | September 21, 2011

Electoral racism in its most naked, egregious and aggressive form is the unwillingness of white Americans to vote for a black candidate regardless of the candidate’s qualifications, ideology or party. This form of racism was a standard feature of American politics for much of the twentieth century. So far, Barack Obama has been involved in two elections that suggest that such racism is no longer operative. His re-election bid, however, may indicate that a more insidious form of racism has come to replace it.

The 2004 Illinois Senate race between Obama and Alan Keyes, two African-Americans, was a unique test of the persistence of old-fashioned electoral racism. For a truly committed electoral racist, neither Obama nor Keyes would have been acceptable—regardless of policy positions, biography or qualification—because both were black.

One way to determine how many people felt this way is to measure the “roll-off.” In presidential election years, a small percentage vote for the president, but then “roll off” by not casting ballots for state and local offices. A substantial increase in roll-off—larger than usual numbers of voters who picked John Kerry or George Bush but declined to choose between Obama and Keyes—would have been a measure of the unwillingness of some to vote for any black candidate. I tested this in 2004 and found no increase, statistical or substantive, in roll-off in Illinois. Faced with two black candidates, white voters were willing to choose one of them.

The 2008 general election was another referendum on old-fashioned electoral racism—this time among Democratic voters. The long primary battle between Hillary Clinton and Obama had the important effect of registering hundreds of thousands of Democrats. By October 2008, it was clear that Obama could lose the general election only if a substantial portion of registered Democrats in key states failed to turn out or chose to cross party lines. For Democrats to abandon their nominee after eight years of Bush could be interpreted only as an act of electoral racism.

Not only did white Democratic voters prove willing to support a black candidate; they overperformed in their repudiation of naked electoral racism, electing Obama with a higher percentage of white votes than either Kerry or Gore earned. No amount of birther backlash can diminish the importance of these two election results. We have not landed on the shores of postracial utopia, but we have solid empirical evidence of a profound and important shift in America’s electoral politics.

Still, electoral racism cannot be reduced solely to its most egregious, explicit form. It has proved more enduring and baffling than these results can capture. The 2012 election may be a test of another form of electoral racism: the tendency of white liberals to hold African-American leaders to a higher standard than their white counterparts. If old-fashioned electoral racism is the absolute unwillingness to vote for a black candidate, then liberal electoral racism is the willingness to abandon a black candidate when he is just as competent as his white predecessors.

The relevant comparison here is with the last Democratic president, Bill Clinton. Today many progressives complain that Obama’s healthcare reform was inadequate because it did not include a public option; but Clinton failed to pass any kind of meaningful healthcare reform whatsoever. Others argue that Obama has been slow to push for equal rights for gay Americans; but it was Clinton who established the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy Obama helped repeal. Still others are angry about appalling unemployment rates for black Americans; but while overall unemployment was lower under Clinton, black unemployment was double that of whites during his term, as it is now. And, of course, Clinton supported and signed welfare “reform,” cutting off America’s neediest despite the nation’s economic growth.

Today, America’s continuing entanglements in Iraq and Afghanistan provoke anger, but while Clinton reduced defense spending, covert military operations were standard practice during his administration. In terms of criminal justice, Obama signed the Fair Sentencing Act, which decreased judicial disparities in punishment; by contrast, federal incarceration grew exponentially under Clinton. Many argue that Obama is an ineffective leader, but the legislative record for his first two years outpaces Clinton’s first two years. Both men came into power with a Democratically controlled Congress, but both saw a sharp decline in their ability to pass their own legislative agendas once GOP majorities took over one or both chambers.

These comparisons are neither an attack on the Clinton administration nor an apology for the Obama administration. They are comparisons of two centrist Democratic presidents who faced hostile Republican majorities in the second half of their first terms, forcing a number of political compromises. One president is white. The other is black.

In 1996 President Clinton was re-elected with a coalition more robust and a general election result more favorable than his first win. His vote share among women increased from 46 to 53 percent, among blacks from 83 to 84 percent, among independents from 38 to 42 percent, and among whites from 39 to 43 percent.

President Obama has experienced a swift and steep decline in support among white Americans—from 61 percent in 2009 to 33 percent now. I believe much of that decline can be attributed to their disappointment that choosing a black man for president did not prove to be salvific for them or the nation. His record is, at the very least, comparable to that of President Clinton, who was enthusiastically re-elected. The 2012 election is a test of whether Obama will be held to standards never before imposed on an incumbent. If he is, it may be possible to read that result as the triumph of a more subtle form of racism.


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Source URL: http://www.thenation.com/article/163544/black-president-double-standard-why-white-liberals-are-abandoning-obama

Offline Emperorjones

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I do believe that white liberals hold Obama to a different standard, and some were a bit too quick to jettison him early on; though I suspect some knew from jump what they were getting and that's why they weren't as supportive. However, it has been three years of Obama abandoning a progressive agenda so I think they are entitled to express their lack of support. Also, using President Clinton is a poor example. Perhaps all the enthusiastic supporters of Clinton's re-election bid who watched his second term become embroiled in the Lewinsky scandal were burned and learned their lesson.

Offline Curtis Metcalf

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I do believe that white liberals hold Obama to a different standard, and some were a bit too quick to jettison him early on; though I suspect some knew from jump what they were getting and that's why they weren't as supportive. However, it has been three years of Obama abandoning a progressive agenda so I think they are entitled to express their lack of support.
I agree that it seems that "abandoning a progressive agenda" is how many perceive it. However, I don't think you can abandon what you never had. President Obama has always appeared to me as a pragmatic moderate who appealed to a wide range of voters.

Also, using President Clinton is a poor example. Perhaps all the enthusiastic supporters of Clinton's re-election bid who watched his second term become embroiled in the Lewinsky scandal were burned and learned their lesson.
How do you mean a poor example? For what purpose?
For the author's purpose, the comparison seems fine to me as far as it goes. Obviously there are many differences but the similarities she describes seem valid. You seem to feel otherwise, EJ. What bothers you about the example?
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Offline Emperorjones

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^
Good point about Obama's pragmatism and liberal misperceptions, I think aided by the media and the GOP who keep trying to say that the Obama administration is left-wing. Though I would argue that Obama ran slightly to the left of Hillary (but to the right or middle of Edwards) during the 2008 primary. Also some of his campaign positions, which he has walked back (like NAFTA, supporting unions, Gitmo), were things I could see progressives would support and make them believe that Obama was a fellow traveler. There was also the best of the worst aspect (in comparison to Hillary and Edwards), a perennial Democratic problem (now its happening to the GOP), that perhaps pushed progressives to Obama. Obama's personal qualities (race, his family, being telegenic, the idea of him, and his language of hope and change), those things also appealed to progressives, IVO. He embodied the message of change in a way that no other candidate did in '08.

As for Clinton comparison. I don't think its a fair comparison because these two men operated in different times and environments. For one, Clinton never dealt with an economy so bad or persistent. The anger in the 90s was more on the fringe, now it is more in the mainstream on the right. Clinton never had to deal with two wars at the same time. Clinton had to face the Gingrich revolution, but I think the tone of it was not as hardcore as the Tea Party and Clinton learned how to triangulate to outmaneuver the GOP. I don't think that Obama has learned how to do that yet in a way that doesn't make him look spineless. Clinton found the right time to compromise and when to fight back, whereas I don't think Obama has. Obama might give better speeches, but Clinton was a better communicator. He was a better emotional connector and he did a much better job of explaining what his accomplishments were. He got progressives feeling that he was on their side and he was at least making an effort to fight, even if that might not have been true all the time, people believed it. Obama's people have been horrible at that so a lot of folks don't know what his achievements are or they are not given the right context to judge them in.

I'm also concerned that this is the best argument that she can make. Well, you voted for Clinton 20 years ago, so why not Obama today? Maybe people wanted someone or an administration better than the Clintons? Maybe they feel they supported Clinton twice and were disappointed and didn't want to experience that again? Also, people's memories are short and with time, the Clinton administration seems quaint (pre-9/11 and with the booming economy) and there is a nostalgic glow. Obama's administration is going on right now and she should be exploring ways to revive progressive support for Obama instead of just saying if you voted for Clinton you should vote for Obama.
« Last Edit: October 07, 2011, 05:27:47 AM by Emperorjones »